The scratches on the little price slab are five "10" hieroglyphs.
At least one hieroglyph decipherer thought that that word also means
"terrible, terrify", quoting from Budge, 1920 (1978). An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary,
section: A List of Hieroglyphic Characters: Strokes and Doubtful Objects.
So, you can pronounce it as 50, or as terrible, terrible, terrible, terrible, terrible.

Lego of our Logo.
Perfectly shaped tiny brown plastic Lego® croissants are
available online from the pick-a-brick store for $0.20.
It's the only baked good they have. (No fish though,
although there is a generically titled "bone".)

On the occasion of shooting the Halloween
logo, we reshot the site logo properly.
So, the croissant, sign, and plate have all changed
(it's no longer a saucer - at least one user complained
about that), the camera is better, and so's
the photographer and postproduction.

I've learned a lot about lighting small objects
since I took the original picture back in '99 in
front of a bedsheet with an architect's lamp and a
web camera. Mainly to not use a bedsheet, an
architect's lamp, and a webcamera, and to let someone else
do the work. Someone who
tapes a little "X" to the ground
to tell me where to stand and hold the flash.

The half croissant had been abducted by a dozen
of zombie croissants formed from mutant sentient
fortune cookie yeast. Thanks to everybody who
helped solve the puzzle formed by the twelve
ideas they gathered in and sent in the magic phrase,
"you crack me up" (it's what the sentient fortune
cookie said to its reader -- get it? Yeah, I
thought it was horrible, too.)